Chronic Groin Ppain
MIXED ETYMOLOGY khronos + grine + poena [noun]
Definition Pain or discomfort in the pelvic area often caused by prostatitis. Prevalence Affects 10-14% of men of all ages and ethnicities. Symptoms Pain in testicles, perineal pain, accompanying pain when urinating or defecating, sexual pain or dysfunction. Diagnosis Physical exam, medical history, ultrasound, urinalysis. Prevention Drinking enough fluids to prevent prostatitis, treating urinary tract infections and bladder infections promptly. Treatment Manual therapies, biofeedback, therapeutic exercises, acupuncture.
Post-prostatectomy dysorgasmia (painful orgasms)
LATIN dys + GREEK orgasmos [noun]
Definition Pain during ejaculation following prostate surgery. Prevalence Affects 14 – 18% of men who’ve had prostate surgery. Symptoms Penile pain generally lasting less than a minute after orgasm, pain in testes, rectum or perineum. Diagnosis Self reported, diagnosis of exclusion. Prevention None. Treatment Pelvic floor muscle training, medications.
Treatments We Offer
- Pelvic floor muscle strength and coordination training
- Urge control strategies
- Bladder and bowel education and retraining
- Breath retraining
- Lumbopelvic stabilisation exercises
- Core strength training
- Dry needling
Has your prostate surgery left you with any of these symptoms?
- Stress incontinence (leaking urine when you cough, laugh, sneeze, or exercise)
- Overflow incontinence (leaking urine when your bladder overfills without any urge)
- Urge incontinence (sudden need to urinate)
- Erectile dysfunction
- Painful orgasm
- Leaking urine on orgasm
The Collective can help you recover your pelvic floor function and continence.
We have created a targeted program to get you through your prostate surgery.
The Pathway to Performance
01. Prepare
‘Precondition your muscles to sustain the effects of surgery’
Optimising your recovery begins before your operation.
Your 1 hour pre-op assessment includes an ultrasound guided pelvic function examination, which assesses your pelvic floor muscle activation. You will receive a personalised pre-prostate surgery rehabilitation program, and be guided through all pelvic floor exercises. You’ll have dedicated time with your Pelvic Physiotherapist to ask as many questions as you like.
We follow the science. There is a large amount of evidence that shows strengthening your pelvic floor muscles can help minimise the time and severity of incontinence post operatively.
That’s why we invest time into your preparation for surgery, teaching specific exercises that will maximise your pelvic floor muscle strength, endurance and co-ordination, improving bladder continence after your prostate surgery.
Strength and conditioning programs. Research has shown that men with a healthy BMI who are physically active prior to their prostate surgery, will have better outcomes and experience less incontinence. Our trained Pelvic Physiotherapists can help you increase the resilience of your body, fitness level and get back to a healthier BMI. This will result in improved outcomes from surgery and a much faster recovery.
02. Restore
‘Repair tissues and recondition your pelvic floor’
Rest assured. After a gentle recovery at home following your prostate surgery, your Pelvic Physiotherapist will create a restorative exercise program to recondition your pelvic floor muscles. You will be taught a series of bladder re-training exercises to reduce stress and urinary incontinence. You will also be guided through a series of bowel re-training exercises, to manage post-operative constipation, reduce extra pressure on the incision site and your pelvic floor muscles.
Getting to gold. All the pelvic floor exercises prescribed to you are designed to get you back to the ‘pelvic floor gold standard’. Your Pelvic Physiotherapist will monitor your progress to make sure you reach your targets.
03. Rehabilitate
‘Recover strength and regenerate nerve function’
Go the distance. Once you have reached the pelvic floor gold standard, you will move on to pelvic floor functional retraining. Now your Pelvic Physiotherapist will guide you through pelvic floor activation techniques. Your bladder and bowel re-training will continue, to reduce the effects of incontinence.
Getting back to sex. Now’s the time to recover your ability to achieve and sustain an erection. You will learn techniques to improve your natural ability to achieve spontaneous erectile function during your rehabilitation.
Get on the pathway